OPINION
Rickey Smith contends that the district court should have suppressed evidence that officers discovered in his residence while he was serving the last years of a 15-to-30-year sentence as a prisoner in a *308 community residential home, which is to say he was living in a private home while connected to аn electronic-monitoring device that ensured he never left the walls of the home without permission. Because the search was reasonable in view of Smith’s continuing prisoner status and in view of his knowledge that officers could search his living quarters as freely as they could search his prison cell and because the exclusionary rule does not apply to knock-and-announce violations, we affirm.
I.
In January 1990, a jury convicted Rickey Smith of stealing a car, and, because this was Smith’s fourth felony, the court sentenced him to 15 to 30 years’ imprisonment as an “habitual offender.” JA 56. Fourteen years later, in February 2004, the Michigan Department of Corrections transferred Smith to its Community Residential Program and permitted him to live in a “community residential home.” See Mich. Dep’t of Corr. Policy Directive 06.03.102 (Oct. 23, 1989). This arrangement permitted Smith tо live in his sister’s home, but it required him to remain there “on tether,” JA 90 — -meaning that Smith would have to remain at his sister’s home (unless he obtained permission to leave) and that the State would ensure he did so by tracking him through a transmitter on his ankle and a monitoring device connected to a рhone jack in the home.
On July 21, 2004, members of the Department of Corrections responded to a tip that Smith had guns and drugs in the home. After forcibly entering the home, the officers searched the basement (where they believed Smith was staying) and discovered two loaded guns under a mattress in the corner of the room.
Smith pleaded guilty to one felon-in-possession-of-a-firearm charge, see 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1), while reserving his right to challenge the court’s denial of his motion to suppress.
II.
A.
“The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to bе seized.” U.S. Const, amend. IV. The question here is one of reasonableness, as the warrant and probable cause requirements generally do not apply to searches of parolees, probationers or their residences.
See Samson v. California,
One factor central to this balancing inquiry is an individual’s status on the “privacy continuum.”
Wilson v. Collins,
In assessing Smith’s situation,
Samson
provides considerable guidance. There, an officer conducted a suspicionless search of a parolee walking down the street.
Smith hаd fewer expectations of privacy than Samson. Smith was treated as a “prisoner” living in a community residential home, Mich. Comp. Laws § 791.265a(l)(c), (9)(b); Mich. Admin. Code r. 791.4401(2)(h), not as a parolee. And while the State permitted Samson to move freely and travel within 50 miles of his home without requеsting permission and placed no monitoring device on him,
Nor should any of this have come as a surрrise to Smith. The officers’ uncontradicted testimony shows that they informed Smith that they had as much freedom to enter his home as they did to enter his prison cell. At an orientation, Smith viewed a video explaining “that the Department has the authority to go to the home, make homе calls if need[ed] to search the premises, his area of control where he ... sleeps ..
.,just as if he were still in the facility,”
JA 94 (emphasis added), and officials explained to Smith that “his home was his prison,” JA 93;
see also
Mich. Admin. Code r. 791.4425(3). No one disputes these facts, and no one argues that an inmate has any legitimate expectation of privacy from unannounced searches of his prison cell.
See Palmer,
The State’s interest in permitting such searches is at least as great as it was in
Samson.
As in
Samson,
“a State has an overwhelming interest in supervising” community-resident prisoners because they “are more likely to commit future criminal offenses.”
Id.
at 853,
Nor do a trio of
cases
— United
States v. Knights,
Samson,
true enough, involved the search of a parolee’s person, not his residence. But the Court’s reasonableness inquiry focused on the parolee’s status and the freedom-to-search condition attached to his parole, not on a person-versus-premises distinction. Smith’s status gave him no greater exрectation of privacy than Samson, and the rules governing Smith’s confinement allowed officers to search the premises and the areas within Smith’s control “just as if he were still in the facility.” JA 94.
Samson
thus applies. “Any other rule would diminish the protection to society given by the search condition [that] permit[s] search at any time.”
United States v. Lopez,
Smith also tries to distinguish
Samson
on the ground that his search condition was communicated through a video and orientation discussions, not through a written parole agreement. That fact neither distinguishes
Samson
nor diminishes the clarity
of the
condition. There was no written search condition for pаrole because the Department of Corrections did not place Smith on parole. Individuals released to a community residential home, like prisoners in a correctional facility, are bound by the Department of Corrections’ rules, which may or may not inсlude a
*311
written agreement.
Compare
Mich. Admin. Code r. 791.4425(3) (“Each prisoner who is classified to community status shall be subject to general and special conditions that are established by the head of the office of residential and electronic programs.”),
with id.
r. 791.7730(4) (“A paroled prisoner shall comply with thе conditions of parole contained in the parole order and with all subsequent conditions approved by the chairperson of the parole board.”).
Samson
expressly declined, moreover, to rest its holding solely on a consent rationale,
B.
Smith independently argues that the officers’ unannounced entry into the residence failed to comply with the knock-and-announce rule “in violation of the Fourth Amendment and 18 U.S.C. § 3109” and contends that the evidence should be suppressed on this ground alone. JA 12;
see also Richards v. Wisconsin,
1.
Like the district court, we find it unnecessary to resolve the witnesses’ conflicting testimony to determine whether there was a knock-and-announce violation. And we agree with the district court that, regardless of whether there was a violation, the Supreme Court has held that the exclusionary rule does not apply in this setting.
Hudson v. Michigan,
Nor, contrary to Smith’s suggestion, does
Hudson
apply only when the officers have a search warrant. The explanations given by
Hudson
are not confined to situations in which the officers violate the knock-and-announce rule after obtaining a warrant as opposed to situations, like this one, where they allegedly violate the rule when they need not obtain a warrant. In both settings, the interests served by the knock-and-announce rule — protection of life and limb, protection of property and the opportunity to collect oneself before answering the door — “have nothing to do with the seizure of the evidence,”
id.,
and nothing to dо with whether the Fourth Amendment required the officers to obtain a warrant. There is nothing about the presence of a warrant that increases the value of deterring knock-and-announce violations, which the Court tells us “is not worth a lot,”
id.
at 596,
Smith’s rule also inverts the relative vices and virtues of the two situations. Why should Smith have
more to gain
from a knock-and-announce violation when the
*312
Fourth Amendment does not even require the officer to obtain a warrant to search his home because he has little-to-no expectation of privacy? Or what about a probationer who expressly consents to future searches?
See Knights, 534 U.S.
at 114,
2.
As for Smith’s reliance on the federal knock-and-announce statute, 18 U.S.C. § 3109, there is not much to say. It “regulates only federal officers ... and has no aрplication when state officers, acting totally without federal involvement, seize evidence that is later offered in a federal prosecution.”
United States v. Gatewood,
III.
For these reasons, we affirm.
